Ohio History Journal




"A New Home--Who'll Follow

"A New Home--Who'll Follow?"

Letters of a New England

Emigrant Family in Ohio, 1831-1842

 

By CHARLES L. SANFORD*

 

 

 

A dominant characteristic of the fifty-year period following the

American Revolution was the rise of national self-consciousness,

reflected by patriotic experiments in ?? literature, in fine arts, in science,

and in other areas of culture. Cultural nationalism was whetted by

the War of 1812 and by the end of the period had made its way

into foreign policy with the Monroe Doctrine and into domestic

policy with Henry Clay's American System of protective tariffs and

internal improvements. In all this a recurrent theme was the con-

trast of America's simple rural virtues with the supposed decadence

of urban, industrial Europe and the eastern seaboard. The East-West

polarity accelerated the movement of the population into the trans-

Allegheny regions and helped to identify the American national

character with frontiersmen like Davy Crockett or with Jefferson's

virtuous yeoman farmer.1

The westward migration of peoples looking for a better, more

abundant material life gave to America the proud title "promised

land," or "land of opportunity." The promises of the frontier were

not reckoned merely in material terms, however, for the New

England Puritans had early associated the business of reclaiming the

wilderness with moral and spiritual destiny. Something of this

buoyant hope for the new country as well as a cultural self-

 

* Charles L. Sanford is a member of the department of language and literature at

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York.

1 Cf. my article, "The Garden of America," Modern Review, LXXXXII (1952),

23-32; also Henry Nash Smith, Virgin Land (Cambridge, Mass., 1950), especially

Chapters III and V.



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consciousness with respect to the people back East is found in the

following Stevens correspondence, written to persuade members of

the Stevens family who had remained at home to share a richer

inheritance in Ohio.2 The various enticements offered in these letters

from the "earthly paradise" included cheap land, a start in business,

a life of ease and domestic bliss, a pastoral setting with fruit trees,

and, not least, a bevy of pretty maids ripe for marriage. These

letters also communicated a child-like enthusiasm for such curious

providences as floods, epidemics, and revivals of religion.

The writers of these letters were descendants of the New England

Puritans. Their ancestors included the Rev. Timothy Stevens, a

graduate of Harvard in the class of 1687 who preached in Glaston-

bury, Connecticut, and Elisha Stevens, a Revolutionary War patriot

who left fragments of a war diary. An enthusiastic progenitor of

his race, Elisha Stevens had three children by his first wife and

eleven children by his second. An offspring of the second marriage

was Ashbell Stevens, the father of the letter-writers. A second son,

Oliver, in 1844 wrote a family chronicle in which he recorded the

fact that "four of Ashbell's [children] have gone to Cincinnati,

Ohio."3 These were Ellen, the oldest (sometimes called "Eliza" or

"Elvia"), Jane (or "Ginny"), John ("Hopy"), and the youngest,

"Ashbel," who was about seven years old in October 1830 when

the family left for Ohio. These children had little of their mother's

religious piety, and their letters, on the whole, are singularly free

of the mawkish sentimentality common to the period in which they

were written.

The children were accompanied on their westward trip by their

mother, Mary Stevens, and removed originally to Norwalk, Ohio,

from Salem Bridge (now Naugatuck), Connecticut. Apparently

their father had died, and they were invited to live in Ohio with

their mother's brothers (mentioned in the letters as "Uncle Joel"

 

2 These fourteen letters of the Stevens family are reproduced in whole or in

part by permission of their owner, Miss Edna Kott of 30 Welch Street, Waterville,

Connecticut. Miss Kott has since died. In reproducing them I have made every effort

to preserve the original punctuation and spelling. The only change consists in

modernizing the old style "s" which appears occasionally in the letters of the mother.

3 In H. Wales Lines, ed., Elisha Stevens, Fragments of Memoranda (Meriden, Conn.,

1922), 9. Oliver here spells Ashbell's name with a double "1," but the letter-writers

use a single "1" for their brother's name.



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154    THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

and "Uncle Edmund"), who were merchants in the Mississippi

trade to New Orleans. The children left behind in Salem Bridge

two older half-brothers: George Stevens, a clerk in a button factory,

and Berzilla, who had taken up farming. The chief drama in these

letters centers on attempts to persuade George and Berzilla to join

the rest of the family in Ohio. In her first letter to George, dated

Norwalk, Ohio, February 6, 1831, Ellen wrote that they had come

part-way by steamboat, that Norwalk had a "paper mill that goes

by steam," and that according to the evidence of her cousin's

wedding at the age of fifteen, "they marry very young, hear." Ellen

herself could not have been much older than twelve at this time

and certainly had not made great progress in writing since leaving

school in New Haven, Connecticut. Soon after getting settled, as

the next letter indicates, the mother started her children in school.

The mother's letter to George, which follows, officially launched

the family siege on George and Berzilla by promoting Ohio as the

land of opportunity:

 

Norwalk, Ohio

April 6th, 1831

Dear Child

I received your letter the 15 of Feb which informed me of the deaths

of our relations. it calls upon us to be readdy the time of our departure

is drawing near You and I are seven months nearer the close of life than

when we last saw each other You wished to hear how I like the western

country I am better pleased with it than I ever was with Salem. I think

you would like it at least I hope you will come and see it if you wanted

a farm you could get a good one and git it cheap. If you wished to take a

school you can. Should you chuse to go into partnership or as a cleark in

a store you could. here is all kinds of bissiness carried on here except

Button Bissiness I think you would not be troubled to find such employ

as you would like

Dear child. Barzilla. I think you are so much of a farmer that you

would do well to come here and by you a farm. I believe you would like to

own such land as this. You never would stumbile over a stone when you was

at plowing. I have rode miles with out seeing a stone little or big. We

have short winters here. we have a very pleasant fall[,] a great deal of

snow in the winter[,] and an early spring the ground has been settled for



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"             155

 

some weeks past. It is [a] pleasure to ride here in a sleigh I rode more

last winter than I have in years before. The most welthy people we have

among us is from the State of Conn and the State of New York. they are

merchants and farmers that have lately come in Ohio agrees with us all.

Elvia is a little tawler than I am Hopy has not grown as fast as Jane or

Ashbel they grow very slimb They all say a great deal about you too.

they often wish you was here Elvia has cried many a time to think She

must be deprived of seeing you.... I hope you will come. Elvia hes gone to

squire Bolts this after non with too of her cousins, the other children are

at school....

 

Mrs. Stevens then made it plain that she had dictated the letter

to another person and was not responsible for its errors in spelling

and punctuation, for she concluded: "Let no one see this. I have

not time to copey it off." This remark and others like it scattered

throughout the letters show the family's sensitivity to the cultural

pretensions of the people back East. Mrs. Stevens' concern for edu-

cation was also, in part, an extension of the New England missionary

zeal for the moral and spiritual development of the West.

In September Ellen was sent to the Female Seminary at Cincinnati

opened by Dr. John Locke in 1823 for daughters of the economically

privileged.4 The seminary had the dubious distinction of being one

of the few institutions in Cincinnati of which Fanny Trollope ap-

proved. Mrs. Trollope, who compensated for her failure to make

American money by loathing American manners, had recently de-

parted from Cincinnati, but her grotesque bazaar and acidulous

remarks kept her memory fresh in Cincinnati. She had once attended

the school's graduation exercise, expressing surprise that the higher

branches of science were "among the studies of the pretty creatures"

and that they received degrees, or diplomas: "One lovely girl of

sixteen took her degree in mathematics, and another was examined

in moral philosophy."5 Mrs. Trollope fervently hoped that young

ladies like Ellen would be "much improved in their powers of

companionship" by exposure to Dr. Locke's progressive theories of

female education. For herself, Ellen had little to say on the subject.

4 Cf. Eugene H. Roseboom and Francis P. Weisenburger, A History of Ohio

(Columbus, 1953), 145.

5 Frances M. Trollope, Domestic Manners of the Americans (New York, 1832), 81.



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156    THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

From Cincinnati she renewed the family campaign to entice George

and Berzilla to Ohio:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

Sept 2nd, 1831

My Dear Brothers

.... I have been sorry that I did not stay to New Haven to School

another year and by that time you would have been ready to come with me

to ohio. Uncle told me to write and tell you that if you would go to New

Orleans next winter he would find business for you. I expect to go to

Salem next summer with Hopy and Uncle Joel and you must prepare your-

self to come back with us and berzilla must come and live with us and you

must go to New Orleans one winter and then get married. Berzilla must

live an old Bachelor and let me keep house for him. I am now in Cincinnati

at school I was hear seven weeks and then Uncle Joel and myself went home

and Hopy came back with us. We commenced School last Monday at Dr.

Locks it is called the best school in this city-- we are not a going home

till next Spring we have got to stay till Uncle comes from New Orleans.

When I first come to Cincinnati I boarded dose by the ohio River could

look acrost and see Kentucky. I have been in the Musium there is a place

in it they call the Infernal Regions the Devil and the Serpents with firey

toungues such a place I never see before.

.... There is great revivals of religion in this State they have meet-

ings that they call 7 day meeting but they get so ingaged that they continue

30 and some 76 days. We had a meetin in Norwalk that lasted 16 days.

I want to see you very much Ashbel grows like a little weed he dont

say much about his play mates in Salem, Jane says very often she wishes she

could see Gorgie and Berzilla and Grandmother and I hope I shall if I

live another year, do answer this as soon as you receive it....

I remain your affectionate Sister

Eliza Stevens

 

Ellen's fascination for "Dorfeuille's Hell" in the wax museum,

her reference to the revivals, her half-humorous concern for her

mortality mingled a youthful zest for life with an almost religious

sense of imminent destiny. But her youthful scepticism and humor

protected her from the apocalyptic visions and the emotional en-

thusiasms which afflicted many of the seekers of a New Jerusalem

in the West and proved to be proof against all but the secular



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"             157

 

vision of prosperity. Her next letter dealt lightly with heavenly

phenomena:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

Feb. 17th, 1832

My Dear Brother

.... There is such a flood in Cin that I went out and took a sail out

on the streets the water came up so high that it drove people out of their

houses. The people have got a tail about that the wourld is comming to an

end next July and that their is a commit comming and is going to strike the

earth and burn it up. They say that their is agoing to be an earthquake at

three oclock but three oclock is past and no earth quake I do not know

what they will have next.... I believe I told you ... what my studys was.

I have grown so fleshy that you would hardly know me I am well and feel

very contented. I wish you would come to ohio.... I do not want you to

think of comming to Ohio but to know it. I had almost forgot to tell you

to direct your letters to the care of Dr. Locke....

Your affectionate

Sister Ellen H. Stevens

 

The world did not end in July--an oversight which must have given

Ellen some satisfaction--but during that summer a serious epidemic

of cholera raged in Cincinnati and other cities. Ellen escaped

unharmed.

In the meanwhile, Ellen's letters had succeeded in arousing her

brother George to make private inquiries among business acquain-

tances and friends about prospects in the West. The nature of his

inquiries indicates that he looked to the West to get rich without

having to work very hard. The next letter is from one of George's

business informants, J. K. Mead, who reveals, among other things,

that George had definitely made up his mind to see Ohio for

himself. J. K. Mead may have been "Uncle Joel."

 

Philadelphia, July 11th, 1832

Sir,

Your letter to my brother was received by him the day I left Ohio.

Your Stepmother desired me to reply to your enquiries about business.--

In the first place then as it respects Lottery tickets, the Vending of them



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158     THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

in the state of Ohio is prohibited by law and made an indictable offence.

It is the same also in Kentucky. Nothing therefore can be done in that

way. As to a fruitery in Cincinnati I cannot speak with certainty, but my

impression is that it cannot be made an object worth your attention.

However, if you desire it, I will, on my return there, make the necessary

enquiry as to that or any other business you name, and communicate to you

the result.

It will be very gratifying to your sisters and brother6 and also to your

step mother to receive a visit from you in the fall. If it shall be your desire

to gratify them in this particular I have no doubt but you will be able to

spend the winter there as pleasantly and as profitably as you can in Salem.

I shall be pleased to receive a line from you during my stay in this City

which I expect will be protracted, at least two or three weeks longer, unless

the Cholera should commence its ravages. As yet not a case has been known

to have occurred here,

I am respectfully

Yrs.

J. K. Mead

 

If J. K. Mead were Ellen's Uncle Joel, as seems likely, his response

to George's inquiries and oblique invitation to George to share his

residence must have seemed rather chilling. In September of 1832

Uncle Joel established Mrs. Stevens and her family permanently in

Cincinnati.

At this time Cincinnati was a rapidly expanding city of some

thirty thousand inhabitants. Mrs. Basil Hall, the British traveler,

considered it an immense town "with a greater appearance of bustle

and business than any town we have seen since those in the Northern

and Eastern States."7 In its cultural aspects and in the origin and

composition of its population Lyman Beecher, the new president of

Lane Seminary, likened it to a "New England City." The influence

of some of its citizens already extended well beyond Cincinnati.

 

6 It was apparently planned that Ashbel would start school in New Orleans that

winter and would not be in Cincinnati.

7 Mrs. Basil Hall, The Aristocratic Journey . . ., 1827-1828, edited by Una Pope-

Hennessy (New York and London, 1931), 285-286. Other interesting accounts of

Cincinnati in this period to which I have had access are Lyman Beecher, Autobiography,

Correspondence, Etc., edited by Charles Beecher (New York, 1865), II, 224, 266-268;

Harriet Martineau, Retrospect of Western Travel (New York, 1838), II, 35-55;

Frances M. Trollope, op. cit., 51-150; and George W Pierson, Tocqueville and

Beaumont in America (New York, 1938), 552-565.



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"                 159

 

Well-known figures included Bellamy Storer and Timothy Walker,

the city's leading lawyers; Dr. Daniel Drake, who founded the

medical college; the Welds and the Beechers, rising stars in the

abolition movement; Salmon P. Chase, beginning a famous political

career; the author Timothy Flint; Judge James Hall, editor and early

delineator of frontier life in fiction; and many visiting celebrities.

A  cultural center of the West, Cincinnati could boast at this

time two colleges, numerous schools, twenty-three churches, two

museums, libraries, and printing presses. Cincinnati offered Ellen

every opportunity to stretch her mind and soul.

At the moment, however, Ellen was the rather inclined to share

this munificence with George. She wrote what she hoped would be

her last letter to him before his arrival in Cincinnati:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

Sept 27th, 1832

Dear Brother

We are now in this city-- we arrived here on the 21st inst all well.

On monday Jane and I shall commence school-- Ashbel will go to New

Orleans with Uncle this winter. We have a pretty good house and com-

fortably furnished. Uncle will leave us for the winter in two or three

weeks-- when he is gone we shall feel quite lonesome unless we can get

some friends to stay with us, if you were with us we think we should be

contented and happy, Uncle has told me to invite you to come out here and

stay with us if you can do so conveniently, we can furnish you a good

chamber and bed and make you as comfortable as you can be in Salem. and

it will cost you nothing-- you may perhaps find business here, and if you

should not you might go to school a few months to perfect yourself in

Book Keeping and some other branches of knowledge necessary for a man

of business which may prove hereafter more advantageous than to remain

where you are and receive a small Salary. If you can come set out as soon

as posible but if not write immediately. but you must not fail of coming

for we all wanto see you. Give my love to Berzilla and all my friends.

Yours E. H. Stevens

 

In a postscript to the same letter Mrs. Stevens was even more

pointed in advising George to prepare himself for a better em-

ployment. She added the information that "Brother has furnished



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the house and will lay in provisions and wood before he leaves us.

we shall not have to go out of doors for wood nor water." She also

directed him to their new address on "third street oppsit the post

office and as there is but one in this city you can find us soon."

Following this letter there is a gap in the Stevens correspondence

of almost two years span, during which the only certainty is that

George did not come West after all. For some reason, whether

commitments at home or an epidemic in Cincinnati or want of funds,

George did not appear in Cincinnati until June 7, 1834--and then

to pay more attention to business prospects and to the fine show of

prosperity made by the uncles than to the brothers and sisters whom

he had not seen for so long. Soon after his arrival he described to

his brother Berzilla in Connecticut the results of his preliminary

investigations:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

June 15, 1834

Dear Brother

I now for the first time address you from cincinnati.... I Have had

some chance to get information respecting the land as rode through the

country of ohio in stage think the improved land verry good but the best

of the wild land is taken up and I should not think of emigrating west

unless I went into Indiania or Ilinois I have talked with men that been

in those states They say the wild land is of the best quality particularly the

dry Prairies where all you have to do is to Burn them and they are ready

for the crops I have been out into the country and hoed corn 1/2 day where

two men keep up with a plough and they Hoe there corn but once I

enquired about land farmers Oh--they ask for good improved land from

25$ to 40$ pr acre and the best working oxen 35$ the average price of

wheat is 62?? corn 25?? I shall probable get more information of the

farmers if stay here through the summer but look for me home the last of

July or first of August but do not think I am Home sick for I enjoy my-

self finely here stroling about town and taking a sly squint at the girls....

Ashbel is a great strapping fellow has been to Orleans twice with his

Uncle who pays 25$ a month for schooling I found them in a large Brick

House Furnished with fine furniture the Bed Stead I sleep on cost 150$

Besides Grand portation from Orleans. Ellens Piano cost 400$ the chair

she sits on to play 15$ It seems as if money was a dreg to the man he



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"                161

 

is yet in New Orleans but we expect him every day was detained longer

than usual trying to recover some money that was stolen from him I think

about $1500....

The children are in my room asking so many questions I must stop

writing--

And in Haste your Affectionate Brother

George S. Stevens

 

Although he did not find the cheap land in Ohio which his step-

mother had pictured, he spent the rest of the summer in Cincinnati,

where he became acquainted with a Miss Clark and several other

eligible young ladies.

In his next letter to Berzilla, dated August 3, he indicates that

upon his return to Connecticut in the fall he and Berzilla both ex-

pected to migrate to Indiana, though, as he said, "I do not think

either of us would make good Hoshsoors." He also wrote:

 

J. K. Mead arrived here from Orleans the 15 July staid here 9 days and

started for the springs in virginia from thence to Philadelphia and says if

his health which at present is verry poor, improves he goes to Ct I stay

untill his return so if he comes to Salem you must not expect me untill

the Middle of Sept if he does not I come about the 10th.

.... It is verry sickly here the last weeks report of deaths was 98--

I now give way for Ellen to write and Jane if she wishes give my love

to Grandmother and all enquiring friends and so addieu

George S. Stevens

 

After the other members of the family had added all the family

news to the letter and Ellen had apologized for its literary im-

perfections, George concluded with another allusion, somewhat re-

vised, to the uncle's wealth: "We have all wrote without saying

a word about Ashbel he has grown finely since you last saw him

has been to Orleans two winters to school which cost his Uncle

$18 a month. . . ."

On July 14, 1835, Ellen wrote from Cincinnati to Berzilla and

George, who by then had returned home, in order to hold them

fast in their intentions of coming West. To Berzilla she said, "I

am sure you will like the place, and I will do my verry best to



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make you happy-- and just let me whisper in your ear, that you

may possibly get a wife, and I will promise to choose one for you

if you will come." To George she offered a similar bribe: "I will

say one thing, that the pretty Miss Clarke is yet single and that

there is still some chance for you." Unfortunately for Ellen,

Berzilla chose a wife for himself in Salem Bridge, causing a delay.

The next year Ellen went to Salem to see what she could do per-

sonally to hasten their plans, and from Cincinnati on June 16, 1836,

the year of the speculative boom in western land sales, Jane tried

her hand at persuasion. To Berzilla Jane wrote:

 

. . . . I would tell you something about this country but I suppose

George has told you more than I can say. . . . Oh Berzilla you cannot tell

how much I want to see you and the more I think of you and how Ellen

will feel when she has almost reached Salem the more impatient I am to

see you again. I am going to school now but Ellen has finished. We have

a very pleasant place, The house is situated on a small hill and it is

sorrounded by fruit trees. It is not in the city exactly but a little ways out

so I have quite a walk from our house. From this City we can look over the

ohio river and see Newport and Covington in Kentucky. . . .

 

Ashbel added a few lines to the effect that he was now going to

the "Woodward High School or College," where he was "trying

to learn something useful."

After Ellen's return from Connecticut still nothing moved, and

Ellen took a sharper, more insistent tone with George:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

Dec. 7th, 1836

Dear Brother

I received yours of the 29th Sept. . . .

Your "intentions of coming out here are like the weather, clear &

cloudy"-- do let them settle with a fixed determination, make up your mind

that you will come, & let everything else give way to that. only think how

much pleasure we should have if you would come--

In these long winter evenings all of us around a good blazing fire, with

occasionally a little music, on your violin & my Piano-- & plenty of books

to read, for our library is larger now, would not it be delightful? And then



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"               163

 

Saturday nights I go to singing school-- & you could go and play on your

violin, for Mr. Mason has several young gentlemen who play. Indeed you

must come George-- Jane & Ashbel are up in arms about it, and Mother

is not behind. If you come now you will be here in the spring ready to

begin business-- or if you do not like to spend the winter idle, I think

you can find emploument.

I know what you will say-- that I do not looke ahead, that I only care

for the present time, that you wish I would stop teasing you, that you know

what is right & best-- I know I plague you, I am like a dunner, following

it up & giveing you no rest until you do.

Laura Porter I did not see, she has slighted me in not giving me a call--

Pretty Miss Clark is married to Mr. Wood but the ladies under the grape

vines are still candidates. . . .

Do not forget when you come to bring your wife, as one of the gentlemen

of the Saturday nights choir calls his violin--

Give my love to Berzilla & wife & Grand-ma

From your ever affectionate Sister

Ellen H. Stevens

 

Marriage finally decided Berzilla against going West in favor of

the home hearth, and Ellen concentrated on George. In her next

letter, dated August 4, 1837, she reported that she and her family

had moved their quarters to Fifth Street between Sycamore and

Broadway, "a few doors west of the Westlian chappel." She made

no direct reference to the Panic of 1837, but noted that her uncle

was having difficulty collecting a year's rent due from the Smiths,

who were tenants of one of the houses back in Salem. Her chief

interest lay in renewing her supplications:

 

I believe I shall not say anything about your coming to Cincinnati for

in very truth you must be tired of it, but I will just tell you that if you

have more of a disposition to go farther south, Uncle is going to want

some one to help him this winter at New Orleans.

 

Self-consciously, she added: "I am most out of breath writing these

very business like sentences I hope I have not made many trespasses

on bad grammar etc."

In answer George apparently gave as his excuse for not coming



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this time a shortage of funds. The effects of the panic, which were

beginning to be felt throughout the nation, may have precipitated

George's decision to go West even as they dried up the sources of

income which would have made it possible. Ellen, who had never

had to worry about money and therefore did not see why others

should have to, was furious with George.

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

Oct. 7th, 1837

Dear Brother

Can it be possible that we shall not see you out here this fall? I can

hardly believe it. I had so fixed my mind upon it that I can not give it

up--   I had fixed upon the week that I received your letter--to seeing you.

It does seem George that you might have borrowed the money--or taken

that which is due from Mr. Smith if it was possible to collect it. but you

have put off coming from year to year, the best part of your life you are

spending there--the time when you ought to be learning--the time when

you can learn most & best.

I do think that if you had been as engaged and as determined about

getting away as you might have been, it would have been accomplished in

some way--

Excuse me George that one so much younger should take upon herself

to say so much but I do it because I love you-- and I think you are

wasteing the best part of your life in drudgery--wearing yourself out, and

not making any thing to live on either--

It is not because I want to see you very wealthy. though to be rich if

it is made a propper use of must be pleasant-- but I want to see you

comfortable, to settle down in life & enjoy yourself--  tis what was in-

tended we should do-- and George I am persuaded that there you can not

do it--there among that grasping selfish class--where each one gets all he

can & if possible at the expense of his neighbour--  I am not speaking ill

of Salem--I love it. it is my native land but most of its children have

sadly degenerated. . . .

I have thought of every way to get some money to send to you but there

is none. I could not ask Uncle for it when he is at so much expense doing

every thing for us. Oh that I was independent-- I think the feeling of

independence must be a comfortable feeling. To feel that you are rich &

can give when you please, what you please.



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"A NEW HOME--WHO'LL FOLLOW?"             165

 

Uncle has been detained from going to New Orleans on account of the

Yellow fever there he will not go for some time yet.

I ask you George to forgive me if I have said more than I ought to, but

as a sister I think I might be allowed to speak plain & I expect it, I ask

it from you--as a brother, to me--  I love candour, dont you? Come as

soon as possible. I can hardly give you up this fall-- Give my love to

Berzilla & wife Amanda, Fanny & others-- All well--

From your ever affectionate

Sister Ellen H. Stevens.

[P. S.] Has Mr Smith left the house? Is any thing collected? and what

are the prospects? I want you to inform us all about the business there--

Uncle wishes to know.                                  E. H. S.

 

Ellen's view of the grasping people back East breathed the pride

of place. Her own idea of the rightness and goodness of wealth,

one might add, partook something of the romantic idealism of place.

As the depression deepened, George grew desperate and begged

for money of Ellen. In the meanwhile, Ellen's uncle had died, and

Ellen married the lawyer William Rankin. In her last extant letter

to George, a note of tragedy is struck:

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

July 4, 1842

My Dear Brother

I hasten to answer your letter which I received yesterday (Sunday) morn-

ing & sorry very sorry I am to disappoint any hopes you may have formed,

but George, I have not got, nor never had that amount of money-- Ashbel

is as badly off as you, he can get nothing to do & many a young man in

this city is in the same situation-- William when he read your letter said

he wished he could help you but it is impossible-- he it is true can get

something to do, as lawyers generally can at such times, but he can get very

little money-- The cry throughout the land is "hard times" & I know not

what you can do, it is among the impossibles that I can help you, I have

nothing but what comes from my husband, Uncle left property, but property

now is not money--

Jane has come back from Indiana & now is keeping house in the city--

Ma has a home North of us-- Ashbel has been living with me ever since

I was married-- I have a little daughter 3 months old, called Mary, after



166 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

166    THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Ma & her Grandma thinks there never was such a baby--   it would be

foolish to say what her mother thinks. . . .

I am sorry for you as you read this letter to find your hopes cut off but

if I could do any thing for you or could devise any thing for you to do

I should be glad to do it. . . .

Do burn this letter. . . .

I am dear George your affectionate Sister

E. H. Rankin

 

The tragedy consisted not only in George's inability to come when

he finally wanted to, but also in the temporary frustration of high

hopes based on the concept of a promised land. Ironically, Ellen's

last letter was written on the Fourth of July. American idealism has

produced great achievement, but also great disillusionment on oc-

casion. The American writer, Gertrude Stein, used to tell the French

that "Europeans do not know anything about disillusion."8 One

suspects that Ellen Stevens had the bravery of spirit which is un-

defeated in any hardship; one is left wondering about the character

of George.

8 Gertrude Stein, Everybody's Autobiography (New York, 1937), 233.